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            <h1>History of Teleneurocommunications</h1>
            <p>
                In 2020, the entirety of the human brain had been completely mapped by biologists, scientists, and neurologists.  Every brain function was catalogued, from emotions to instinctual behavior to the origins of memory.  Humans finally knew the inner workings of their own minds, a problem that had intrigued mankind for thousands of years.  As soon as this colossal feat was accomplished, engineers of all disciplines began to see what practical applications the research had.  In 2025, a German electrical engineer named Fredreich Bronheim was able to decipher the communications between neurons in the brain by analyzing their electronic waveforms.  He used this research to formalize a method of communicating with individual brains, often using computers to generate signals that could be read by an individual’s brain unconsciously.
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                <label for="boris">Dr. Fredreich Bronheim</label>
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            <p>
                Bronheim’s research led to the birth of “teleneurocommunications”.  The dawn of a new age of human communication had begun.  Rather than translate human speech into electronic signals, as had been done with the telegraph, radio, and eventually telephone and cellphone, the new devices of the age of teleneurocommunication would directly translate human thought into the binary sequence of 1’s and 0’s that could be understood by computers.
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                In 2030, an American scientist named Jay Chou used Bronheim’s research to send visual images to the human brain from a computer.  Only a year later, the same technology was used to record images from the human eyes, effectively “recording” human memory and experience in real-time.  In 2040, these technologies were combined into the first portable teleneurocommunications device, the psyPhone.  The psyPhone released June 7th, 2040 to universal acclaim and earned the Nobel Award for greatest achievement in human technology.  The psyPhone continues to be the leader in teleneurocommunications.
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